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doc: clarify how to read process.stdin
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document more clearly that stdin will emit multiple readable events

PR-URL: #27350
Reviewed-By: Matteo Collina <[email protected]>
Reviewed-By: Robert Nagy <[email protected]>
Reviewed-By: James M Snell <[email protected]>
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anentropic authored and MylesBorins committed Jul 16, 2020
1 parent e818455 commit a0cfa62
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17 changes: 2 additions & 15 deletions doc/api/process.md
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -2259,21 +2259,7 @@ The `process.stdin` property returns a stream connected to
stream) unless fd `0` refers to a file, in which case it is
a [Readable][] stream.

```js
process.stdin.setEncoding('utf8');

process.stdin.on('readable', () => {
let chunk;
// Use a loop to make sure we read all available data.
while ((chunk = process.stdin.read()) !== null) {
process.stdout.write(`data: ${chunk}`);
}
});

process.stdin.on('end', () => {
process.stdout.write('end');
});
```
For details of how to read from `stdin` see [`readable.read()`][].

As a [Duplex][] stream, `process.stdin` can also be used in "old" mode that
is compatible with scripts written for Node.js prior to v0.10.
Expand Down Expand Up @@ -2624,6 +2610,7 @@ cases:
[Event Loop]: https://nodejs.org/en/docs/guides/event-loop-timers-and-nexttick/#process-nexttick
[LTS]: https://github.com/nodejs/Release
[Readable]: stream.html#stream_readable_streams
[`readable.read()`]: stream.html#stream_readable_read_size
[Signal Events]: #process_signal_events
[Stream compatibility]: stream.html#stream_compatibility_with_older_node_js_versions
[TTY]: tty.html#tty_tty
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39 changes: 35 additions & 4 deletions doc/api/stream.md
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -1127,17 +1127,48 @@ automatically until the internal buffer is fully drained.

```js
const readable = getReadableStreamSomehow();

// 'readable' may be triggered multiple times as data is buffered in
readable.on('readable', () => {
let chunk;
console.log('Stream is readable (new data received in buffer)');
// Use a loop to make sure we read all currently available data
while (null !== (chunk = readable.read())) {
console.log(`Received ${chunk.length} bytes of data.`);
console.log(`Read ${chunk.length} bytes of data...`);
}
});

// 'end' will be triggered once when there is no more data available
readable.on('end', () => {
console.log('Reached end of stream.');
});
```

The `while` loop is necessary when processing data with
`readable.read()`. Only after `readable.read()` returns `null`,
[`'readable'`][] will be emitted.
Each call to `readable.read()` returns a chunk of data, or `null`. The chunks
are not concatenated. A `while` loop is necessary to consume all data
currently in the buffer. When reading a large file `.read()` may return `null`,
having consumed all buffered content so far, but there is still more data to
come not yet buffered. In this case a new `'readable'` event will be emitted
when there is more data in the buffer. Finally the `'end'` event will be
emitted when there is no more data to come.

Therefore to read a file's whole contents from a `readable`, it is necessary
to collect chunks across multiple `'readable'` events:

```js
const chunks = [];

readable.on('readable', () => {
let chunk;
while (null !== (chunk = readable.read())) {
chunks.push(chunk);
}
});

readable.on('end', () => {
const content = chunks.join('');
});
```

A `Readable` stream in object mode will always return a single item from
a call to [`readable.read(size)`][stream-read], regardless of the value of the
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